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Saturday, June 9, 2012

Walker Evans: Depression Era Portraits

With the likes of Dorothea Lange and Gordon Parks already featured here for their Depression era portraits and images, you would think that everything that needs to be said about that time has already been said. This blog would be remiss, however, if it did not feature the stark images of photojournalist Walker Evans.

Walker Evans was actually born into a relatively well-to-do family, but he fared poorly in school, dropping out of college and then working at different jobs, first in Paris, then in New York without much success. His first serious foray into the photography business came around 1928 when one of his amateur photographs was published along side a poem by Hart Crane.

It was in 1936 that Evans did his seminal work, documenting the lives of three sharecropping families in Alabama. The photographer spent three weeks taking portraits of the rural families making their way amidst the face of crushing poverty. The results of those three weeks proved too powerful for Fortune magazine (which had sent Evans there on assignment) to print, but the images were later published along with the moving text of writer James Agee in the book, "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men".

After his time with the FSA in 1938, Evans moved to other equally interesting projects. One of these was taking voyeuristic portraits of New York subway passengers with a hidden camera in his coat. These photographs were published in the book, "Many Are Called". Evans eventually became an editor for Time magazine before moving to Fortune, where he would spend most of the last few years of his life.

Like many of the great photographers of the last century, Evans sought to capture people and places with "...the mask off". He sought to capture the truth, no matter how un-pretty or un-presentable it may be. His images may have been to serve as a warning for his generation, but more than fifty years on, they still serve the same purpose today.